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TAHARA, FUMIKI (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   189970


Heteronomous rationality and rural protests: Peasants’ perceived egalitarianism in post-taxation China / Tahara, Fumiki   Journal Article
Tahara, Fumiki Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This study focuses on Chinese peasants’ behavioural logic after the abolition of agricultural taxes in 2006. The everyday words and deeds of the residents of an ordinary village in Gansu Province were observed and interpreted. Their behavioural logic can be conceptualized as ‘heteronomous rationality’, according to which one’s behavioural choice is based on whether one is treated equally and fairly in comparison with others. When deviations from this standard are observed, rural peasants are motivated to protest. This study further examines when and how this Chinese-style peasant egalitarianism was shaped.
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2
ID:   118429


Principal, agent or bystander? governance and leadership in Chi / Tahara, Fumiki   Journal Article
Tahara, Fumiki Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract What does 'local self-governance' mean in post-communist Russia and China? In order to answer this question, the article focuses on village-level governance in both countries by employing a four-fold typology of village leadership in public affairs. In both countries, the withdrawal of state power from local communities and the introduction of legislative 'self-government' has not brought autonomy to the local and community levels. The findings here suggest that the single 'state agent' category of village leadership that emerged under the communist regime is shifting to become one of the remaining three types, 'principal', 'local agent' and 'bystander'. There was a growing tendency towards a non-autonomous type of 'bystander'-style leadership in China and the 'local agent' type in Russia. This article suggests that the development of these local governance styles should not be attributed to a common transitional process departing from the communist past, but is the outcome of four factors that influence village leaders in two countries: administrative distance between local and village level, village social structure, fiscal arrangements and electoral relationships.
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